The Big Sponge Hangout is happening this week, with live Google Hangouts, pre-recorded videos and lots of L&D and technology conversation. I’ve been recorded for a video and I’ll tweet/blog about that separately 😀

I was working on the first day and couldn’t attend the live hangout, so wanted to watch the recording and see what the Twitter conversation was. I got to the page for the recording just fine, but couldn’t find the Twitter hashtag!

Twitter isn’t the only way of engaging with people and having a conversation, but it is an important one and should be accessible to people if they want it – as with any other social media space.

I thought to myself, I’ve made sure this is easy to find on the TJ website where I host monthly webinars. Then I looked, and realised I hadn’t! So I’ve put it in the first piece of text of the page and it’s more immediately obvious:

I’ve also made sure to add a sentence about it, and a link to the tweets in the hashtag, further down the page in the explanation of how it works.

Take-away

The thing to think about, is what might your audience want from your landing page/home page/information page about your event, product or service, and make it easy for people to access.

By seeing this on another website, it prompted me to update the TJ one.

I’ve been having a few frustrations recently with regards customer and technical service. If you follow me on Twitter, you’ve probably already got bored of my increasingly frustrated tweets about the level of service from my domain and web hosting company. Through my frustration with Titan Internet’s increasingly poor service and what feels like disregard for the customer, along with others, led me to think about the quality of customer service through Twitter, and also the reliance we have in life and business on our technology providers.

Titanic issue

I find it really quite sad when the level of service falls so much. I moved my business to Titan Internet when it first began, way back in about 1999. I was one of their first, if not largest or most profitable customers, when I was designing websites and even had a recommendation on their home page. They were a fantastic company with brilliant support. Lee Christie, founder, has on his LinkedIn profile“I started Titan on the principles of excellent technical knowledge and customer service. I’ve grown the company to 20+ staff whilst retaining those basic principles and as a result customers love us to bits :)” and that was true. I couldn’t recommend them enough.

Some 15 years later and the story is very different. Titan Internet were taken over, grown larger and since then I’ve had no end of trouble. Their technical systems aren’t correct, telling me my domains are ok when they seem to expire, or vice versa, they’ve miss-sold me products and their technical support is a joke. Most recently I logged an urgent support ticket 10am Friday of a whole domain and five email accounts being down and their 24/7 support finally responded 7pm on Sunday. I feel that is unacceptable technical support and will come back to that point later.

In this day and age of social media, how can a company not use it’s Twitter account or acknowledge it’s disgruntled customers?

This article highlights some research about response times on twitter and some key lessons that organisations can take away from the examples they share: How Are Top Brands Doing With Twitter Customer Service? There are four key takeaways from this article and, looking just at the Twitter experience, Titan fail all of them!

Respond quickly – no response at all

Make it easy – see point 1

Manage your presence – no tweets since 2011

Provide appropriate knowledge – see point 1!

Obviously once I saw they weren’t responding on Twitter my own tweets were more about farcical frustration relief!

Technical customer service

This led me to reflect on some other pretty poor service I’ve received in the last six months, largely from Virgin Internet and BT over my broadband. I won’t bore you with the details, but it was about installation in a new property for a high speed internet line from each (I work from home running my own business in the live online delivery area so need the backup line). The time it took to get this moving was ridiculous, as well as then the quality of speed from BT and general service from both. What astounded me more than anything was that these were business accounts. And just like with Titan, the technical support and follow up just weren’t up to scratch. In BT’s case, when my broadband line wasn’t working, I was told that “broadband isn’t considered a business essential tool” and therefore I just had to wait for it to be fixed.

I couldn’t believe what I was hearing. A technology and communications company were telling me that one of their business products wasn’t essential for support and to get up and running!? Another element that angered me was that I am the customer – surely it’s down to my business to determine what is essential? For someone who’s business is based largely around facilitating and producing/hosting online training sessions, having a broadband connection is pretty damn essential!

Am I having a rant? Yes. Am I extremely angry and frustrated? Yes. Can I do anything? Well, I can vote with my feet where Titan is concerned and I’ve asked for recommendations to move provider, but only once this latest technical issue is sorted out. With BT and Virgin media? Pretty much no choice if I want internet access!

It’s just not good enough

Veri Ivanova via Unsplash.com

The bigger issues here are around quality of technical support service and response times, especially in business situations where I think it’s completely unacceptable to wait days and days on end for any kind of response let alone a fix. These issues cause so much stress for the individuals and organisations involved it’s ridiculous. I’ve been without email on one of my domains for seven days now and there’s very little I can do about it. That’s a pretty sad reflection on technical and customer service with some businesses.